Photo: NPS Photo / B FluckigerBest For
Tent campers and backpackers who want high-elevation solitude and dark-sky stargazing without the crowds of the valley-floor campgrounds. Anyone towing a trailer or driving an RV should look elsewhere — the steep, winding gravel access road makes this exclusively a car-camping-lite destination.
No
Hookups
Sitting at 5,400 feet, Deer Park is the highest-elevation campground in Olympic National Park and the one most likely to reward you with unobstructed mountain views and genuinely dark skies. The tradeoff is access: the gravel road is steep, winding, and explicitly not suitable for RVs or trailers, which naturally limits the crowd size and preserves the remote feel. No reservation data is available through Recreation.gov for this campground, suggesting it operates on a first-come, first-served basis — meaning summer weekends can still fill, but you won't lose a refresh-button war to get here.
Content from Olympic National Park park guide
July and August are peak months at Olympic, with 10,876 and 10,842 reservations respectively — and 18.7% to 19.5% of those locked in 6+ months before arrival. September drops to 8,356 reservations with 27.8% booked last-minute, making it the best balance of reliable weather, manageable crowds, and realistic last-minute availability. March and April see only 307 and 694 total reservations with 0.0% booked 6+ months out, offering genuine walk-up access at campgrounds like Sol Duc and the park's first-come sites.
Olympic's fragmented geography — three separate ecosystems with no interior roads connecting them — means your campground choice determines which part of the park you can reasonably explore. Reaching Kalaloch or South Beach from Heart O' the Hills requires a 90-minute drive around the peninsula's perimeter, so plan your itinerary around one region per trip or be prepared for significant daily driving. Dosewallips is currently inaccessible by vehicle due to a washed-out road 6.5 miles from camp, and Queets is accessible only from the Upper Queets River Road after a mudslide closed the primary route — verify current conditions before any visit to the park's more remote campgrounds.
The park entrance fee is $35 per vehicle and covers access for seven days. Nightly camping rates vary by campground but are not individually broken out in available data — expect rates consistent with National Park Service standards for non-hookup sites. The America the Beautiful Annual Pass ($80) covers the entrance fee for all national parks and federal lands, making it a straightforward value for anyone visiting more than two fee-area parks in a year; it does not waive campsite reservation fees.
Maximum stays range from 7 nights at the reservation campgrounds (Kalaloch, Mora, Hoh, Staircase, Fairholme) to 14 nights at first-come campgrounds and Sol Duc. Cell service is unreliable to nonexistent throughout most of the park — download offline maps and campground information before leaving Port Angeles, Forks, or Aberdeen, the closest supply towns for different park sections. Pets are generally allowed in campgrounds but not on most trails; generator hours and quiet hours vary by campground, so check specific regulations before arrival.
Address
Clallam County, Washington
Coordinates
47.9488, -123.2601

Olympic National Forest

Olympic National Forest

Olympic National Park
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Olympic National Park

Olympic National Forest

Olympic National Forest






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